Slain Aid Workers Were Bound by Their SacrificeArticle:
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/08/10/world/asia/10aidworkers.html?_r=1&partner=rss=rssThe 10 civilian aid workers killed Thursday in Afghanistan, from top left: Glen D. Lapp,
Tom Little, Dan Terry, Dr. Thomas L. Grams, Cheryl Beckett, Brian Carderelli, Dr. Karen Woo,
Daniela Beyer, Mahram Ali and Ahmed Jawed
Glen D. Lapp, 40, of Lancaster, Pa., was a nurse who ran an eye-care program. He was an avid cyclist. A nurse with a big smile. A man whose passion for hiking, adventure, and people was plain to see.
"A beautiful person," said an adoring friend.
Tom Little, 61, from Delmar, N.Y., was the coordinator of the National Organization of Ophthalmic Rehabilitation Eye Care Program in Afghanistan, overseeing hospitals and clinics, teaching optometry and administering care in the most rural of areas. He was the leader of the group of 10 medical workers returning from treating people in Nuristan Province who were ambushed and killed.
Mr. Little, with 35 years' experience in Afghanistan, had encountered Taliban fighters on many occasions at his eye camps and other rural outreach missions, and told friends that he always carried a bottle of soothing saline solution in case fighters demanded treatment for eye problems.
Dan Terry, 64, had been doing relief work in Afghanistan since 1971, and spoke Dari fluently.
Mr. Terry had just recovered from knee surgery, and had looked forward to joining the arduous hike over a 16,000-foot pass to reach a remote valley, providing eye care and other medical services.
Mr. Terry is survived by his wife, three daughters, and one granddaughter, according to the International Assistance Mission.
Dr. Tom Grams, 51, of Durango, Colo., left a thriving dental practice to go to Afghanistan. He had trekked to villages halfway up Mount Everest, carrying dental equipment by yak, and in Afghanistan had learned to negotiate the etiquette of the burka so he could work on the diseased teeth of women who may never have seen a dentist.
Cheryl Beckett, 32, of Knoxville, Tenn., had traveled the world, often on church-sponsored mission trips, before moving to Afghanistan six years ago. There she worked at women's clinics, planted vegetable gardens and tried to establish a park on the eastern side of Kabul.
She was invited on the expedition to Nuristan primarily as an interpreter, because she spoke fluent Dari, said her father, Charles Beckett.
Dr. Karen Woo was a 36-year-old surgeon from Hertfordshire, England, who specialized in women's health.
At 16, she trained as a contemporary dancer and then worked as a wing-walker for a flying circus. At 22, she entered medical school and eventually volunteered for missions in South Africa, Australia, Papua New Guinea and Trinidad and Tobago. Two years ago, she quit her $150,000-a-year job to move to Kabul.
Daniela Beyer, 35, of Chemnitz, Germany, was the daughter of a minister and also spoke Dari.
Pierre Grosse, chairman of the church council in the German community of Wittgensdorf, where she was a member, recalled her as a deeply religious woman, the daughter of a retired pastor, who translated textbooks into Afghan languages.
“She was a little shy, not someone who would make a big deal about herself,” Mr. Grosse said.
One of two Afghans killed,
Mahram Ali, 51, supported two disabled sons on his salary of $150 a month. He came along on the expedition as a driver and to guard the team’s three vehicles.
Rahim Majid, the operations manager at International Assistance Mission, said Mr. Ali, too, was a husband and father to three young children. One of his sons had been paralyzed by polio and another’s arm had been amputated.
“He was the only person to care for his family,” Mr. Majid said.
Second Afghan victim,
Ahmed Jawed, 24, a cook, had been excitedly considering what to do with the $20 a day in overtime he would earn on the trip. Mr. Jawed was the main breadwinner for his wife, three children and extended family, and was known in his neighborhood for the collection of 500 audiotapes he would break out for weddings or parties.
From this slideshow:
http://www.nytimes.com/slideshow/2010/08/09/us/20100810_Aidworkers.html